G
Geremia
Guest
Even Aeterni Patris calls it doctrina, not philosophia.Archbishop Villeneuve and Fr. Garrigou-Lagrange forget that Thomism itself is eclectic in the same manner that they complain about. One of the Dominicans in Fr. Ashley’s priory pointed out to me that Thomism is not a “system”
He means that we shouldn’t try to reconcile muntally contradictory philosophies, like materialism with one that also assumes immaterial beings, in the name of “fraternal charity” because that is impossible. St. Thomas took what is true in other philosophies and rejected that which was false, leaving something pure like refined gold, so in a sense he was eclectic but not syncretic. He was also innovative; he is not just a rehashing of Aristotle.he did not take first principles and derive their conclusions irregardless of whether those conclusions seem true or not, and irregardless as to whether he was still being faithful to the heart of Aristotelian of Platonic philosophy. He simply took and borrowed truth from all over the place, from all the Greek and Arab philosophers at hand, whether they were Platonists or Aristotelian. That’s eclecticism. Eclecticism isn’t motivated by a “false idea of fraternal charity”, but rather by the fact that we see partial aspects of truth elucidated by lots of different schools.
Code:...] to be a faithful disciple of St. Thomas today, it is not enough to want to do in our time and with the means available today that which he did in his. Contenting oneself with imitating him, like walking on a parallel street without anything to draw from him, one would with difficulty arrive at a positive result or, at least, offer to the Church and to the world that contribution of wisdom which they need. One cannot, in fact, speak of true and fecund loyalty if one does not receive, almost from his own hands, his principles which also illuminate the most important problems of philosophy and, to be more precise, to understand better the faith in these our times and, similarly, the fundamental notions of his system and the force of his ideas. Only so, the thought of the Angelic Doctor, confronted always with new contributions of profane science, will meet—through a sort of mutual osmosis—a new, thriving, lively development. [RIGHT]—Pope Paul VI's 1974 letter [*Lumen ecclesiæ*](http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/paul_vi/apost_letters/documents/hf_p-vi_apl_19741205_lumen-ecclesiae_it.html) 29. [my translation][/RIGHT]
Well, this is an historical fact.And, as I said, phenomenology in the manner of Sartre and Wojytla should be the groundwork and foundation of true philosophy (I’m a little skeptical of Husserl with his bracketing). I would like to re-derive Heidegger’s glorious metaphysic, the whole scholastic metaphysic, science viewed as the phenomenology of measurement, and Hegel’s grandiose vision all from phenomenology (transcendental philosophy should be perfectly possible and should complement natural philosophy, provided we don’t make Schelling’s silly mistake of confusing the transcendental ego with God; I would like to systematically re-derive Schelling’s system of transcendental philosophy preserving that distinction).
I take strong objection to Garrigou-Lagrange’s statement that “the Church has repeatedly declared that she holds to Thomism”.
Are you referring to, e.g., Fides et Ratio 54.: “The Church has no philosophy of her own nor does she canonize any one particular philosophy in preference to others.”? I think he was referring to how theology and philosophy are autonomous even though there is overlap, such as when you have one premise of a syllogism being an article of faith and another drawn from philosophy or logic, but this would strictly belong to theology.Actually, the Church HAS declared that Thomists cannot declare non-Thomists to be heretics and vice versa
Again, sorry for the hackneyed example, but what about the Council of Trent’s definition of the transubstantiation? How do you even begin to make sense of it without the matter/form distinction?, and she has always permitted Scotism, Augustinianism, and other schools of theology. All the Church did is declare Thomism to be a suitable worldview to teach to seminarians to combat modern heresies. Only Roman Catholicism has adopted the Thomist worldview;
Also, what do you think about Humani Generis?the Eastern rites of the Church have our own theology which is not Thomist.
Really? He uses explicitly this example?I also fail to see how Thomism can explain, as G-L says it can, such phenomena as electricity.
Really? How can one have a continuum, then?And saying that “extension has its source in matter” seems to fall back on the Cartesian idea of extension being the essence of matter, whereas in reality all matter consists of point particles.
So Kant is a priori true? How ironic…And, finally, Thomism cannot - without striking at the heart of the actual thought of St. Thomas - synthesize the transcendental approach to philosophy initiated by Kant.